
Examples of half lives of some common isotopes
Radioisotope
|
Half-life
|
Uranium-238
|
5000 million years
|
Uranium-235
|
700 million years
|
Plutonium-239
|
24 000 years
|
Carbon-14
|
5700 years
|
Calcium-137
|
30 years
|
Cobalt-60
|
5 years
|
Determining the Half-life
Nuclei in a radioactive sample disintegrate at random.
Each nucleus has the equal chance of being decayed. Which means that at any time, any nuclei can decay / disintegrate.
Activity = the average number of decay or disintegrations per unit time in a radioactive sample.
During the decay of a radioactive sample, the number of atoms which have disintegrated increases, while the number of atoms which have not disintegrated decreases. It has to be remembered that the total number of atoms remain constant during this process.
The rate of decay lessens as the number of intact atoms that remain decreases and thus activity decreases with time as the number of undecayed atoms decreases.
It has to be noted that different radioactive elements decay at different rates.
Point: Half-life, t½ , of a radioactive isotope is the time taken for the activity of atoms of that isotope to fall to half of its original value.
also
Half-life (t½) can also be stated as the time taken for the number of radioactive atoms to decrease to half of its original number.
Consider this:
i. If N is the number of original atoms in a radioactive sample.
ii. After one half-life has lapsed, half (1/2)N atoms remain and half (1/2)N atoms have disintegrated.
iii. After two half-lives, (1/2)X(1/2)N = (1/2)^2 N = (1/4) N atoms remain and (3/4)N atoms have disintegrated.
*Remember: N - (1/4) N = (3/4) N
iv. This decay process continues until a stable atom is produced.
v. Say x = number of half lives
N = original number of atoms
Nx = number of atoms remaining after x half-lives, then we can say that
Nx = (1/2)^x N
(Remember the symbol ^ means to the power of)
Also, it is worth to consider these formulas:
- N0 is the initial quantity of the substance that will decay (this quantity may be measured in grams, moles, number of atoms, etc.),
- N(t) is the quantity that still remains and has not yet decayed after a time t,
- t1/2 is the half-life of the decaying quantity,
- τ is a positive number called the mean lifetime of the decaying quantity,
- λ is a positive number called the decay constant of the decaying quantity.
,
, and λ are all directly related in the following way:Source: wikipedia.com



